The senators wrote this letter seemingly without a sense of the tremendous ironies laced throughout. First, they express concern over a threat to the First Amendment. Consider that — they are working to restrict a local broadcast company from reporting news to more people, to silence its voice, and citing the First Amendment guarantees of Freedom of the Press and Freedom of Speech as the reasons to do so.

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Second, they level the accusation that Sinclair’s broadcast decisions are driven by corporate and political agendas. It bears mentioning that, on average, a local Sinclair station programs about 96 percent of the weekly local news content, and about 4 percent of the content material is produced at the corporate level. Again, consider this: 12 senators, in overwhelmingly partisan fashion, sign onto a letter to intervene in a free-market acquisition because they find themselves in disagreement with an exceptionally small percentage of the content Sinclair distributes. One has to ask, who is politicking here?

In a swift reply, Chairman Ajit Pai affirmed his agreement with Sen. Markey’s words from the senator’s previous letter and reasserted them to support his decision not to pursue the senators’ request:

“I agree with Sen. Markey that ‘[a]ny insinuation that elected officials could use the levers of government to control or sensor [sic] the news media would represent a startling degradation of the freedom of the press.’ I also take this opportunity to reaffirm the commitment I made to several members of the Senate Commerce Committee last year that the Commission, under my leadership, would ‘not act in a manner that violates the First Amendment and stifles or penalizes free speech by electronic media, directly or indirectly.’”

The catalyst for this letter appears to be the recent media furor regarding Sinclair’s practice of providing local affiliate stations with scripts. Not only is this standard practice across the industry, there are no regulations prohibiting Sinclair from having local anchors deliver a scripted promotional message. So what, then, could the senators’ letter truly be about? I struggle to find anything in Sinclair’s script that is not utterly mainstream.

Media often report on fake news; fact-checking often falls by the wayside. It’s a problem and presents a danger to our democracy. In the media, some people push an agenda, across the political spectrum, and those who don’t report facts need to be exposed.

Finally, what truly begs questioning here is the media’s coverage of this sequence of events. Rightfully, there was mass coverage of the fallout from President Trump’s challenge of NBC licenses in October 2017. Many in the media shined a light on that as a threat to the First Amendment. Likewise, there is currently far-reaching coverage of Chairman Pai’s declination of the senators’ request to challenge Sinclair’s licenses. What received comparatively minimal media coverage was the senators’ challenge of Sinclair’s licenses in the first place.

Why is that? Why was there no outrage, given what an assault that would be on the First Amendment? I’ll continue searching for the answer.